feh uses argv[0] to set the default theme, because
feh is wrapped this will be .feh-wrapper. This makes
it hard to use the configuration on multiple systems
and can be confusion. Therefore the theme is explicity
set to 'feh'.
Note that longDescription should not be formatted as:
longDescription =
'' Bla bla
bla bla
'';
because this will cause the second line to have more preceding
whitespace. It should be:
longDescription =
''
Bla bla
bla bla
'';
This is "Mac port" addition to GNU Emacs 24. This provides a native GUI
support for Mac OS X 10.4 - 10.9. Note that Emacs 23 and later already
contain the official GUI support via the NS (Cocoa) port for Mac OS X
10.4 and later. So if it is good enough for you, then you don't need to
try this.
HipChat (or rather its copy of Qt) expects to find keyboard data in
/usr/share/X11/xkb. So use a LD_PRELOAD library to intercept and
rewrite the Glibc calls that access those paths. We've been doing the
same thing with packages like Spotify, but now this functionality has
been abstracted into a reusable library, libredirect.so. It uses an
environment variable $NIX_REDIRECTS containing a colon-separated list
of path prefixes to be rewritten, e.g. "/foo=bar:/xyzzy=/fnord".
$ nix-env -f . -qa '*' --meta --xml --drv-path --show-trace
error: while querying the derivation named `clementine-1.2.1':
while evaluating `optional' at .../lib/lists.nix:113:20, called from .../pkgs/applications/audio/clementine/default.nix:50:22:
undefined variable `not' at .../pkgs/applications/audio/clementine/default.nix:50:32
For some reason library paths are not set at all for some libraries during
the build. Wrapper with LD_LIBRARY_PATH set for relevant libraries is currently
solution.
Clementine has an optional dependency on libspotify, which is unfree.
Enabling libspotify unconditionally prevented Hydra from distributing
Clementine. Now, we optionally enable it based on
config.clementine.spotify.
fetchpatch is fetchurl that determinizes the patch.
Some parts of generated patches change from time to time, e.g. see #1983 and
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.linux.distributions.nixos/12815
Using fetchpatch should prevent the hash from changing.
Conflicts (auto-solved):
pkgs/development/libraries/haskell/gitit/default.nix
1) Packages formerly called haskell-haskell-platform-ghcXYZ-VVVV.X.Y.Z are
now called haskell-platform-VVVV.X.Y.Z. The latest version can be
installed by running "nix-env -i haskell-platform".
2) The attributes haskellPackages_ghcXYZ.haskellPlatform no longer exist.
Instead, we have attributes like haskellPlatformPackages."2012_4_0_0".
(The last numeric bit must be quoted when used in a Nix file, but not on
the command line to nix-env, nix-build, etc.) The latest Platform has a
top-level alias called simply haskellPlatform.
3) The haskellPackages_ghcXYZ package sets offer the latest version of every
library that GHC x.y.z can compile. For example, if 2.7 is the latest
version of QuickCheck and if GHC 7.0.4 can compile that version, then
haskellPackages_ghc704.QuickCheck refers to version 2.7.
4) All intermediate GHC releases were dropped from all-packages.nix to
simplify our configuration. What remains is a haskellPackages_ghcXYZ set
for the latest version of every major release branch, i.e. GHC 6.10.4,
6.12.3, 7.0.4, 7.2.2, 7.4.2, 7.6.3, 7.8.2, and 7.9.x (HEAD snapshot).
5) The ghcXYZPrefs functions in haskell-defaults.nix now inherit overrides
from newer to older compilers, i.e. an override configured for GHC 7.0.4
will automatically apply to GHC 6.12.3 and 6.10.4, too. This change has
reduced the redundancy in those configuration functions. The downside is
that overriding an attribute for only one particular GHC version has become
more difficult. In practice, this case doesn't occur much, though.
6) The 'cabal' builder has a brand-new argument called 'extension'. That
function is "self : super : {}" by default and users can override it to
mess with the attribute set passed to cabal.mkDerivation. An example use
would be the definition of darcs in all-packages.nix:
| darcs = haskellPackages.darcs.override {
| cabal = haskellPackages.cabal.override {
| extension = self : super : {
| isLibrary = false;
| configureFlags = "-f-library " + super.configureFlags or "";
| };
| };
| };
In this case, extension disables building the library part of the package
to give us an executable-only version that has no dependencies on GHC or
any other Haskell packages.
The 'self' argument refers to the final version of the attribute set and
'super' refers to the original attribute set.
Note that ...
- Haskell Platform packages always provide the Haddock binary that came with
the compiler.
- Haskell Platform 2009.2.0.2 is broken because of build failures in cgi and
cabal-install.
- Haskell Platform 2010.1.0.0 is broken becasue of build failures in cgi.
Without this it'll complain and abort when clicking "Take Screenshot" or
"Browse Local" when creating a new VM and looking for an CD-ROM image to boot
from:
GLib-GIO-ERROR **: Settings schema 'org.gtk.Settings.FileChooser' is not installed
This fixes build for version 36, which i accidentally broke in commit
f6e31fadd8.
The reason this happened, was that my Hydra didn't pick up the latest
commit and I actually tested and built the parent commit instead of the
update commit.
So, this commit is the real "builds fine, tested" for all channels.
Also, the sandbox client initalization has moved into
setuid_sandbox_client.cc, so we need to move the lookup of the
CHROMIUM_SANDBOX_BINARY_PATH environment variable there.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
The system attribute was already there in the function head of the
shared update helper but it actually wasn't used and thus later the
import of <nixpkgs> was done using builtins.currentSystem instead of the
system attribute inherited from the source derivation.
Now we correctly propagate the attribute, so that even when running a
64bit kernel you can run a 32bit Chromium with binary plugins.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
These packages come with R, but if we install them as part of this build, then
we cannot update them without re-building R as well. Instead, we add those
packages to the R environment through the r-wrapper. This means that
recommended packages can be updated in cran-packgaes.nix, and those updates
have an effect on the installation without re-building R itself.
This fixes the issue of Chromium not being able to load the pulseaudio
librarp
We could also propagate the build inputs, but it would end up being the
same as just directoly linking against the library.
Thanks to @aristidb for noticing this in #2421:
https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/pull/2421#issuecomment-42113656
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This packaging splices off the unfree faac library and forces handbrake
to use the (more recent/patched) versions of libraries in Nixpkgs.
Produces the CLI HandbrakeCLI and optionally the GTK+ version ghb.
This also tweaks the version number to just use the SVN revision (rather
than date), since it's unambiguous and increasing anyway.
Signed-off-by: Austin Seipp <aseipp@pobox.com>
This should fix the desktop icon location for both desktop entries (the
one from the Chromium derivation itself and the wrapper) and renames the
name of the file so that it gets overridden by the wrappers desktop item
so we don't end up having two of them.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
What this allows us to do is define a "dumpcap" setuid wrapper in NixOS
and have wireshark use that instead of the non-setuid dumpcap binary
that it normally uses.
As far as I can tell, the code that is changed to do lookup in PATH is
only used by wireshark/tshark to find dumpcap. dumpcap, the thing that's
typically setuid, is not affected by this patch. wireshark and tshark
should *not* be installed setuid, so the fact that they now do lookup in
PATH is not a security concern.
With this commit, and the following config, only "root" and users in the
"wireshark" group will have access to capturing network traffic with
wireshark/dumpcap:
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.wireshark ];
security.setuidOwners = [
{ program = "dumpcap";
owner = "root";
group = "wireshark";
setuid = true;
setgid = false;
permissions = "u+rx,g+x";
}
];
users.extraGroups.wireshark.gid = 500;
(This wouldn't have worked before, because then wireshark would not use
our setuid dumpcap binary.)
This makes running wireshark (or more specifically, dumpcap) as root a
bit more secure. From <wireshark-1.11.2>/doc/README.packaging:
The "--with-libcap" option is only useful when dumpcap is installed
setuid. If it is enabled dumpcap will try to drop any setuid privileges
it may have while retaining the CAP_NET_ADMIN and CAP_NET_RAW
capabilities. It is enabled by default, if the Linux capabilities
library (on which it depends) is found.
The real path of the schemas is:
$out/share/gsettings-schemas/gsettings-desktop-schemas-3.10.1/glib-2.0/schemas
While the previous approach was to load schemas from:
$out/share/glib-2.0/schemas
So, we're now relying on the setup hook of glib to find the right schema
path.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
If dmenu isn't installed in the user environment, dmenu_run will fail
because it searches $PATH for its own binaries.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Youtube feeds now don't append a "sig" query string argument anymore, so
all those feeds would fail without this patch. For the latter, a pull
request already exists on upstream at pculture/miro#428, so I guess we
can drop our patch upon release of the next new upstream bugfix release.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
This implements some longstanding work of getting the Chromium
derivation more modular. Unfortunately, I didn't manage to decrease the
compile time, which was one of the primary goal for doing the refactor.
A main reason this didn't work out well was the fact that most bundled
libraries are so heavily patched that it's not possible within a limited
time frame to decouple it from the main derivation.
However, it should now be easier to build other derivations that build
upon Chromium, like libcef. Also, it finally adds support for the
non-free PepperAPI Flash and PDF plugins and support for fetching the
corresponding versions through the updater.